Deportation & Removal

Facing Deportation from New Zealand?

A deportation liability notice or deportation order is serious — but it is not always the end. Time is critical. Our licensed immigration advisers act fast to explore every available option to help you remain in New Zealand.

Strict deadlines apply. Appeals to the Immigration and Protection Tribunal must generally be lodged within 42 days of receiving a deportation liability notice. Missing this deadline can mean losing your right to appeal entirely. Contact us immediately.

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Deportation adviser
Understanding Deportation

What Happens When You Receive a Deportation Notice?

Deportation in New Zealand is a formal legal process under the Immigration Act 2009. It begins with a Deportation Liability Notice (DLN) — a notice that INZ intends to deport you. This is not the same as a Deportation Order, and receiving a DLN does not mean you will automatically be removed.

Between the DLN and any actual removal, there are important windows to appeal, apply for Ministerial intervention, or seek judicial review. Acting quickly — and with expert help — gives you the best possible chance of remaining in New Zealand.

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Reasons for Deportation

Common Grounds for Deportation in New Zealand

Deportation can arise from a range of situations. Understanding the ground for your deportation liability is the first step to challenging it.

Unlawful Presence

If your visa has expired and you have remained in New Zealand, you are unlawfully present and liable for deportation. Acting quickly — including through a Section 61 request — can protect your position.

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Criminal Deportation

A criminal conviction in New Zealand can trigger a deportation liability notice. The sentence received — even a fine or community service — determines whether INZ can begin deportation proceedings.

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Visa Condition Breach

Working in breach of your visa conditions, studying without the right to do so, or violating another condition can make you liable for deportation — even if your visa is still current.

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Failed Residence Application

A declined residence application can trigger a requirement to depart. If no other visa pathway is available and you remain, INZ may issue a DLN. Appeal options and Ministerial pathways still exist.

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Character & Security Grounds

INZ can deport a person on character or national security grounds — including serious criminal history or associations. These cases require specialist handling and urgent legal advice.

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Misrepresentation

If INZ discovers that false or misleading information was provided in a visa application, the resulting visa can be cancelled and a DLN issued. This applies even years after a visa was granted.

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Your Options

Ways to Challenge Deportation

There is rarely just one option. We assess your full situation and identify every available avenue — then pursue the strongest ones.

01

Appeal to the Immigration & Protection Tribunal

The IPT is an independent body that can hear appeals against deportation on both legal and humanitarian grounds. The Tribunal considers factors including your length of time in New Zealand, family connections, and the effect of deportation on your children. This is often the most powerful tool available — but deadlines are strict.

Deadline: 42 days from DLN
02

Ministerial Intervention (Section 177)

Under Section 177 of the Immigration Act, the Immigration Minister has discretion to cancel a deportation order on humanitarian grounds. This is an extraordinary remedy — it requires a compelling case demonstrating that deportation would be unduly harsh given your personal circumstances. We prepare strong Ministerial requests.

Discretionary — compelling case required
03

Section 61 Request

If you are unlawfully present, a Section 61 request asks INZ to grant you a visa before any deportation proceeds. A well-prepared request highlighting humanitarian factors, family ties, and your history in New Zealand can halt the deportation process while being considered.

Best used early — before a DLN is issued
04

Judicial Review

If the deportation decision was made unlawfully — for example, if INZ failed to follow correct process or acted outside its powers — you may apply to the High Court for a judicial review. This can result in the deportation decision being quashed and the case reconsidered.

Available where INZ acted unlawfully
How We Help

Our Approach to Deportation Cases

01
Immediate Review

We review your DLN or deportation order the same day and advise you on the exact deadlines that apply to your situation.

02
Identify All Options

We assess every avenue available — Tribunal appeal, Ministerial intervention, Section 61, judicial review — and advise on which gives you the best realistic outcome.

03
Build Your Case

We gather evidence of your ties to New Zealand — family, employment, community, length of residence — and present a compelling case for you to remain.

04
Represent You

We represent you before the Tribunal, in Ministerial communications, and with INZ — keeping you informed and fighting for your right to stay at every stage.

Got Questions?

Frequently Asked Questions

Facing deportation is stressful. Contact us directly — our advisers are available to talk through your situation.

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A Deportation Liability Notice (DLN) is a formal notice from Immigration NZ that you are liable for deportation — it is not yet a removal order. A Deportation Order is issued after appeal rights have been exhausted or waived, and it authorises INZ to physically remove you from New Zealand. There is an important window between these two stages where you can act.

In most cases, you have 42 days from the date of the Deportation Liability Notice to lodge an appeal with the Immigration and Protection Tribunal. This deadline is strict — missing it almost always means losing your right to appeal. Contact us immediately upon receiving a DLN.

Yes. The Immigration and Protection Tribunal can consider humanitarian circumstances — including your length of time in New Zealand, family ties, the effect on dependent children, employment, community contributions, and any exceptional circumstances. A strong humanitarian case can result in the Tribunal cancelling the deportation liability, even where the legal grounds for deportation are established.

Having New Zealand citizen children is a significant humanitarian factor but does not automatically prevent deportation. The Tribunal and the Minister give serious weight to the best interests of children in New Zealand, particularly where separation would cause substantial hardship. A well-prepared case presenting your children's circumstances and dependency on you is essential.

Missing the 42-day appeal window does not necessarily mean all options are exhausted — but it significantly narrows them. Ministerial intervention under Section 177 may still be available, and in some cases a judicial review application can challenge the process. However, these are harder paths. Contact us immediately — even if you believe the deadline has passed.

Deportation from New Zealand usually results in a period during which you cannot return — often five years or longer, depending on the grounds for deportation. In some cases, particularly involving criminal convictions, the stand-down period can be indefinite. We can advise on whether a return pathway exists and what steps you would need to take.

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